ABC 7 News reporting MPD was told not to interfere?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:WJLA ABC 7 News is reporting that Tenleytown and Friendship Heights residents are being told by MPD that while they were present at the looting of the CVS and Target last night, they were told not to interfere. Who would give this order and has the Mayor fired them yet today?

So Police no longer investigate property theft, they no longer investigate auto theft and now they do not interfere with looting?


That area is now called South Baltimore. Enjoy.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Good. Police interference would only result in more violence. Stuff can be replaced. People can’t.


My post got deleted but police are doing exactly what they are supposed to do. The order they preserve is to preserve life, not property.

The national guard and park police, on the other hand, who cleared protesters before curfew so Trump could have a photo op, was a horrific abuse of power.


On what planet does law enforcement site back and do nothing when there is arson, looting, destruction, and/or vandalism going on?
Oh, we know, protests!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Bowser is totally ok with the looting. It’s going to lead to people defending their property with guns. That can descend into horrible violence fast. There needs to be order.


No, people will just let their lease run down and leave for Va, Md, or elsewhere. Why stay?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Me and my wife have three doctors we need to see in Chevy Chase, Md. we are seniors and these doctors ave very important to us, when we drove north bound on Wisconson ave. Chevy Chase looked like a third world country with all the windows broken out along the way. My advice to the mayor of Chevy Chase Md. is the tax revenue that you will loose from all the businesses that were destroyed pays you and your police Departments salary's so you need to get a clue and try to preserve the reputation of your once beautiful city.

Signed Anomyous

ALL of downtown DC is boarded up. 2*4s thick with plywood. May as well leave them there, no one is working in the restaurants nor offices. Just come ASD your spray paint layer to what’s already there.

Just wait for the rent rolls. dC might take a big hit like NYC is- people are not coming back to work in the city and may even relocate entirely.
Anonymous
Since there was no further looting in Friendship Heights or Tenleytown after that night, and since no people were injured in any confrontations between police and vandals, it sort of seems like this decision that everyone has spent five pages criticizing may have been the right one?

The risk of a police intervention in a situation like this is that something bad -- people breaking into shops after hours when there's no one else in the store and stealing stuff -- becomes something worse -- a full-on street fight between cops and looters. The District should certainly be willing to help compensate businesses that lost money as a result of the break-ins or pay them back for the plywood many put up, but as a resident of the neighborhood, I'm glad the police didn't run the risk of increased violence in the name of protecting property.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Since there was no further looting in Friendship Heights or Tenleytown after that night, and since no people were injured in any confrontations between police and vandals, it sort of seems like this decision that everyone has spent five pages criticizing may have been the right one?

The risk of a police intervention in a situation like this is that something bad -- people breaking into shops after hours when there's no one else in the store and stealing stuff -- becomes something worse -- a full-on street fight between cops and looters. The District should certainly be willing to help compensate businesses that lost money as a result of the break-ins or pay them back for the plywood many put up, but as a resident of the neighborhood, I'm glad the police didn't run the risk of increased violence in the name of protecting property.[/quote

Agreed. Had there been violent confrontation, it might also have encouraged others to be violent and destructive. Instead, the looting ended quickly, and the peaceful protests became the dominant narrative.

Also, the fact that things were not burned down means that the recovery will be much quicker.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Since there was no further looting in Friendship Heights or Tenleytown after that night, and since no people were injured in any confrontations between police and vandals, it sort of seems like this decision that everyone has spent five pages criticizing may have been the right one?

The risk of a police intervention in a situation like this is that something bad -- people breaking into shops after hours when there's no one else in the store and stealing stuff -- becomes something worse -- a full-on street fight between cops and looters. The District should certainly be willing to help compensate businesses that lost money as a result of the break-ins or pay them back for the plywood many put up, but as a resident of the neighborhood, I'm glad the police didn't run the risk of increased violence in the name of protecting property.


So, "we" should be willing to reimburse them as these would be tax dollars "we" pay.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Since there was no further looting in Friendship Heights or Tenleytown after that night, and since no people were injured in any confrontations between police and vandals, it sort of seems like this decision that everyone has spent five pages criticizing may have been the right one?

The risk of a police intervention in a situation like this is that something bad -- people breaking into shops after hours when there's no one else in the store and stealing stuff -- becomes something worse -- a full-on street fight between cops and looters. The District should certainly be willing to help compensate businesses that lost money as a result of the break-ins or pay them back for the plywood many put up, but as a resident of the neighborhood, I'm glad the police didn't run the risk of increased violence in the name of protecting property.


Great MO. Anything to protest, now you know you can show up five finger anything you want and not get stopped nor arrested. New American value.
Anonymous
And may sure you do it in the burbs’ stores.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:WJLA ABC 7 News is reporting that Tenleytown and Friendship Heights residents are being told by MPD that while they were present at the looting of the CVS and Target last night, they were told not to interfere. Who would give this order and has the Mayor fired them yet today?

So Police no longer investigate property theft, they no longer investigate auto theft and now they do not interfere with looting?


This is incredibly racist. Property is insured and can be replaced. Black lives are worth more than an insurance deductible. We must support the protestors opportunity to express their message of hundreds of years of oppression.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:WJLA ABC 7 News is reporting that Tenleytown and Friendship Heights residents are being told by MPD that while they were present at the looting of the CVS and Target last night, they were told not to interfere. Who would give this order and has the Mayor fired them yet today?

So Police no longer investigate property theft, they no longer investigate auto theft and now they do not interfere with looting?


This is incredibly racist. Property is insured and can be replaced. Black lives are worth more than an insurance deductible. We must support the protestors opportunity to express their message of hundreds of years of oppression.


Should they loot every store while protesting?
Totally justified?
Defund DC police.
Let people by guns and hire the police as private security force.
Anyone who support the looters should open their doors.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Me and my wife have three doctors we need to see in Chevy Chase, Md. we are seniors and these doctors ave very important to us, when we drove north bound on Wisconson ave. Chevy Chase looked like a third world country with all the windows broken out along the way. My advice to the mayor of Chevy Chase Md. is the tax revenue that you will loose from all the businesses that were destroyed pays you and your police Departments salary's so you need to get a clue and try to preserve the reputation of your once beautiful city.

Signed Anomyous

ALL of downtown DC is boarded up. 2*4s thick with plywood. May as well leave them there, no one is working in the restaurants nor offices. Just come ASD your spray paint layer to what’s already there.

Just wait for the rent rolls. dC might take a big hit like NYC is- people are not coming back to work in the city and may even relocate entirely.


ALL of downtown DC is no such thing.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Me and my wife have three doctors we need to see in Chevy Chase, Md. we are seniors and these doctors ave very important to us, when we drove north bound on Wisconson ave. Chevy Chase looked like a third world country with all the windows broken out along the way. My advice to the mayor of Chevy Chase Md. is the tax revenue that you will loose from all the businesses that were destroyed pays you and your police Departments salary's so you need to get a clue and try to preserve the reputation of your once beautiful city.

Signed Anomyous

ALL of downtown DC is boarded up. 2*4s thick with plywood. May as well leave them there, no one is working in the restaurants nor offices. Just come ASD your spray paint layer to what’s already there.

Just wait for the rent rolls. dC might take a big hit like NYC is- people are not coming back to work in the city and may even relocate entirely.


Might be fine?
Since the US does minimal urban planning (Charles Koch spends big money advocating against public transit etc) DC hasn’t been sustainable as a city. Too many people want to live here and a car-centered low-height single-family-home-zoned culture doesn’t work to accommodate that many people.

Keep DC at 700k people and it will stay a vibrant and liveable city.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:WJLA ABC 7 News is reporting that Tenleytown and Friendship Heights residents are being told by MPD that while they were present at the looting of the CVS and Target last night, they were told not to interfere. Who would give this order and has the Mayor fired them yet today?

So Police no longer investigate property theft, they no longer investigate auto theft and now they do not interfere with looting?


This is incredibly racist. Property is insured and can be replaced. Black lives are worth more than an insurance deductible. We must support the protestors opportunity to express their message of hundreds of years of oppression.


Should they loot every store while protesting?
Totally justified?
Defund DC police.
Let people by guns and hire the police as private security force.
Anyone who support the looters should open their doors.


I respectfully disagree. What part of what is happening to Black Americans leads you to think it’s ok to shoot them to defend property? Thankfully DC, MD, and VA have no castle doctrine or stand your ground laws. Using deadly force to protect property is wrong and illegal. Any one who kills another human being to protect property deserves to spend the rest of their lives in jail.

Please wake up and realize that this the result of killing innocent unarmed Blacks by the government. We are better than this and will make it through a better and stronger country for our children.
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